Mick Mulvaney’s Master Class in Destroying a Bureaucracy From Within

The C.F.P.B. was created to protect Americans from predatory lenders after the financial crisis. President Trump’s new chief of staff took it apart on his way to White House.

One rainy afternoon early in February 2018, a procession of consumer experts and activists made their way to the headquarters of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in Washington to meet Mick Mulvaney, then the bureau’s acting director. The building — an aging Brutalist layer cake, selected by the bureau’s founders for the aspirational symbolism of its proximity to the White House, one block away — was under renovation, and so each visitor in turn trudged around to a side entrance. Inside the building, Mulvaney had begun another kind of reconstruction, one that would shift the balance of power between the politically influential industries that lend money and the hundreds of millions of Americans who borrow it.

Three months earlier, President Trump installed Mulvaney, a former congressman from South Carolina, as the C.F.P.B.’s acting director. Elizabeth Warren, who helped create the agency in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, envisioned it as a kind of economic equalizer for American consumers, a counter to the country’s rising structural inequality. Republicans had come to view her creation as a “rogue agency” with “dictatorial powers unique in the American republic,” as the party’s 2016 platform put it. In Congress, Mulvaney had established himself as an outspoken enemy of the bureau, describing it, memorably, as a “joke” in “a sick, sad kind of way” and sponsoring legislation to abolish it.

Continue reading “Mick Mulvaney’s Master Class in Destroying a Bureaucracy From Within”

Trump accuses Dems of ‘treason’ even as Mulvaney seeks a border deal with them

‘No one views the White House as credible on this issue,’ says senior House Democratic source

President Donald Trump continues accusing congressional Democrats of treason — a crime punishable by death — over their border security policies even as his acting chief of staff was on Capitol Hill Wednesday seeking a deal.

And a senior Democratic aide expressed doubt that a deal is likely over what promises to be among 2020’s most contentious campaign trail issues.

Twice on Wednesday, the president had critical words for Democrats over their ongoing dispute about his proposed U.S.-Mexico border wall and a list of other policy differences related to immigration. In a tweet as he returned from Texas on Air Force One, the president again accused unnamed Democrats of betraying their country — apparently for opposing his hardline immigration policies.

View the complete April 11 article by John T. Bennett on The Roll Call website here.

Mulvaney: Democrats will ‘never’ see Trump’s tax returns

Acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney said Sunday that Democrats will “never” see President Trump‘s tax returns.

“Nor should they. That’s an issue that was already litigated during the election. Voters knew the president could have given his tax returns, they knew that he didn’t, and they elected him anyway,” Mulvaney said during an appearance on “Fox News Sunday.”

He added that Democrats “know they’re not going to” get the tax returns.

View the complete April 7 article by Michael Burke on The Hill website here.

No, Mick Mulvaney, Republicans don’t have a respectable record on preexisting conditions

ACTING WHITE HOUSE Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney insisted Sunday that the 60 millionAmericans with preexisting medical conditions have no reason to fear President Trump’s new push to scrap Obamacare. “The debate about preexisting conditions is over,” he said. “Both parties support them, and anyone telling you anything different is lying to you for political gain.”

He’s right that someone is being dishonest about preexisting conditions, but it’s not the Democrats. For nine years, Republicans have promised a silver-bullet policy that would adequately cover Americans without resort to big spending, mandates or costs to healthy people, if only the voters would let them govern. After voters put them in charge, they offered one half-baked plan after another and never could pass one. Mr. Mulvaney is either deluded or himself lying when he argues that Republicans have a respectable record on preexisting conditions. Continue reading “No, Mick Mulvaney, Republicans don’t have a respectable record on preexisting conditions”

Trump’s decision on health care law puts spotlight on Mulvaney

President Trump’s decision to call for ObamaCare’s complete dismantling in court is shining the spotlight on Mick Mulvaney, the acting White House chief of staff who reportedly pushed for the action.

Mulvaney, a former member of the conservative House Freedom Caucus, argued in favor of backing a lawsuit to nullify the Affordable Care Act during a White House meeting with other officials, according to two published reports.

The intervention in a case brought by attorneys general from more than a dozen GOP states has frustrated congressional Republicans by handing a new campaign argument to Democrats — just as that party was staggering from the end of special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe.

View the complete March 28 article by Peter Sullivan and Jordan Fabian on The Hill website here.

A potential recession looms — and gloomy economic indicators show it may do maximum damage

Acting Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney. Credit: Manuel Balce Ceneta, AP

There’s no great time for an economic downturn. But there are some timings that are worse than others, and it looks like the U.S. might be swinging toward recession at a time when it could do maximum damage.

On Sunday, Donald Trump tweeted that he had a 93 percent approval rating among Republicans, and retweeted a story that Republican leaders wanted to stay close to Trump to bask in his “economic miracle.” That 93 percent rating didn’t actually come from a poll of all Republicans. It came from a poll conducted at CPAC, a politics convention that draws only the most crazed conservatives. But it does show that the most right-wing of the right-wing is indeed wedded to Trump. However, it came from a poll conducted at the previous CPAC. So … maybe not so much today. And if the opinion piece Trump tweeted claimed that he was beloved because he hadn’t yet managed to screw up a decade worth of economic improvement … hold his Diet Coke. Because that may be coming to an end.

As reported by Bloomberg, a whole series of economic indicators have turned gloomy. And were’ not talking about the relation of the market to the winning team in the world series, or a connection between the housing rate and Punxsutawney Phil. These are the basic economic indicators that show which way the wind is blowing in the very near future.

View the complete March 19 article Mark Sumner with Daily Kos on the AlterNet website here.

Mulvaney on cusp of permanent status upgrade

‘He has stayed out of a lot of people’s way,’ said one senior administration official. ‘No one is saying he is killing it but staying out of people’s way has helped.’

The White House plans to drop the word “acting” from Mick Mulvaney’s title, officially making him President Donald Trump’s third chief of staff, according to four current and former senior administration officials.

It’s a recognition that Mulvaney has successfully navigated a tumultuous West Wing. The former South Carolina congressman and White House budget chief talks to the president multiple times a day and maintains good relations with Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner — Trump family members who also happen to be the White House’s two most powerful staffers — while giving them and other top staffers more leeway to operate than his predecessor, John Kelly. Mulvaney has also quietly installed roughly eight loyal aides within the West Wing.

“He has stayed out of a lot of people’s way,” said one senior administration official. “No one is saying he is killing it but staying out of people’s way has helped.”

View the complete March 19 article by Nancy Cook on the Politico website here.

Fox News’ Chris Wallace brings the receipts after White House acting chief of staff insists Trump is ‘not a white supremacist’

Mick Mulvaney, the Acting White House Chief of Staff, claimed on Fox News Sunday that President Trump is not a white supremacist.

Host Chris Wallace noted that some critics claim that the president “has contributed to an anti-Muslim climate,” including a statement from Senator and 2020 hopeful Kirsten Gillibrand, where she said, “time and time again, this president has embraced and emboldened white supremacists—and instead of condemning racist terrorists, he covers for them.”

Kirsten Gillibrand

@SenGillibrand

Time and time again, this president has embraced and emboldened white supremacists—and instead of condemning racist terrorists, he covers for them. This isn’t normal or acceptable. We have to be better than this. https://twitter.com/rebeccaballhaus/status/1106646387872149504 

Rebecca Ballhaus

@rebeccaballhaus

Trump, asked if he sees white nationalism as a growing threat around the world: “I don’t really. I think it’s a small group of people.”

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Wallace also pointed out similarities between the New Zealand shooter’s statement about “killing invaders” and the president’s own statements the next day using framing immigrants crossing our southern border as an “invasion.”

View the complete March 17 article by Gwendolyn Smith with The New Civil Rights Movement website here.

‘It will create a firestorm’: Mulvaney’s border wall cash grab sparks dissent in White House

The pitfalls of a plan for Trump to shift federal dollars without an emergency declaration are coming into clearer view.

The White House is firming up plans to redirect unspent federal dollars as a way of funding President Donald Trump’s border wall without taking the dramatic step of invoking a national emergency.

Done by executive order, this plan would allow the White House to shift money from different budgetary accounts without congressional approval, circumventing Democrats who refuse to give Trump anything like the $5.7 billion he has demanded. Nor would it require a controversial emergency declaration.

The emerging consensus among acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney and top budget officials is to shift money from two Army Corps of Engineers’ flood control projects in Northern California, as well as from disaster relief funds intended for California and Puerto Rico. The plan will also tap unspent Department of Defense funds for military construction, like family housing or infrastructure for military bases, according to three sources familiar with the negotiations.

view the complete February 11 article by Nancy Cook and Eliana Johnson on the Politico website here.

Old land deal quietly haunts Mick Mulvaney as he serves as Trump’s chief of staff

Acting White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney was involved in a real estate deal in North Carolina that is now subject to a legal dispute. (Joyce Koh/The Washington Post)

 Mick Mulvaney was a young businessman and budding politician 11 years ago when he became co-owner of a company that wanted to build a strip mall near a busy intersection in this upscale bedroom community outside Charlotte.

All that was needed was money.

The company cobbled together the financing — which included borrowing $1.4 million from a family firm owned by a prominent local businessman named Charles Fonville Sr., according to court records and interviews.